I'm still kinda confused about the Lighting audio stuff. Wikipedia says "Lightning is an 8-pin connector which carries a digital signal" so I'm just trying to figure out how the digital signal gets converted to analog for headphones. Either the Lightning port can carry analog audio too or the Lightning headphones have to contain some sort of crappy DAC, right? Does the $9 adapter have a crap DAC built in too for use with other headphones? Does anyone know how this will work with existing headphones?

Do you guys think Apple will make another announcement soon for iPad line or today's talk was about it.

I guess more bang for the buck @ $399 with 32GB now. Glad I held out...should I hold out longer?

I told the g/f about Apple's plan for the headphone jack. Her response: "Are you saying that I can't plug an iPhone 7 into my Bose speakers? Whaaaaaat? What kind of drugs are they doing over there at Apple?"

They are ripping off the bandaid, so to speak. People shit on them for the "courage" word but it truly is ballsy as hell. So sick of armchair CEOs who have zero clue about product development and how difficult it can be making trade offs. Apple is not the most valuable company in the world by accident.

It will be a transition period more painful than that of the cd rom for instance, but we'll all be better off in a couple years.

At the end of the day, you can choose not to buy the phone. What a concept.

The kind of drugs where they give you a simple adapter and all the complaining over the past 20 pages is moot.

Adapters suck. They are one more thing to carry, to worry about and possibly break or lose.

We also have no idea the quality of the DAC Apple has built into this adapter. The old iPhones never had the greatest DAC's built in. Do we have faith that Apple matched them with these plastic adapters they are selling? If not, your quality of music you are able to hear via any headphones plugged into these adapters will go down.

Of course I am not all that sure Apple cares about quality of music all that much at this junction. Otherwise they wouldn't be pushing $159 wireless headphones that likely sound no better then the average at best sounding headphones they have been giving us for free with the phones for years.

So it's $29 for a broken screen. $99 for any other type of damage. Considering water damage is the main other factor leading to this type of replacement, I would think the new water proofing means most AppleCare+ consumers won't be shelling out the $99 often.